MRS. PIOZZI’S FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT OF DR. JOHNSON
(JOHNSON, Samuel) PIOZZI, Hester Lynch. Anecdotes of the Late Samuel Johnson During the Last Twenty Years of His Life. London: T. Cadell, 1786. Small octavo, contemporary half speckled brown calf, red morocco spine label. $1500.
First edition of Piozzi’s famous first-hand account of her long association with Samuel Johnson, scarce in contemporary boards.
Hester Thrale (later Piozzi) first met Dr. Johnson in 1765, and he became a frequent houseguest, with Mrs. Thrale nursing him through his illnesses. They were very close, but after her husband's death, Mrs. Thrale's relationship with Johnson became strained as "Johnson's roughness and demands upon her time became intolerable." She married Piozzi, an Italian musician, in 1784, and when Johnson learned of it he "replied in a letter of unjustifiable fury, to which she made a dignified reply. He admitted that he had exceeded his right, thanked her for her kindness, and took leave with sad forebodings. She states that she replied affectionately; but they never again met" (DNB). Johnson died shortly thereafter, and Piozzi published this celebrated personal account of their relationship, which features first printings of 24 bits of verse by Johnson, along with numerous anecdotes, observations and conversations. With scarce Postscript leaf. With half title and without errata slip, each found in only some copies. With cancel leaf K2 as usual, which suppressed a passage critical of Boswell. Lowndes, 1872.
A few spots of soiling to interior, wear to binding, unobtrusive repair to joints. An exceptionally good copy in original boards.